After the sun drops behind the Sierra Madre and the last tour boats return to Marina Vallarta, something extraordinary happens at Los Arcos Marine Park. Microscopic plankton begin to glow. Every wave, every paddle stroke, every movement of your hand through the water produces a trail of cold blue-green light — as though the ocean is responding to your touch. Puerto Vallarta is one of the few places in Mexico where this phenomenon is reliably visible year-round.
What Is Bioluminescence
Bioluminescence is light produced by living organisms through a chemical reaction. In the waters off Puerto Vallarta, the primary source is dinoflagellates — single-celled plankton that emit a blue-green glow when the water around them is disturbed. The reaction is a defense mechanism: the light startles predators and attracts larger animals that feed on whatever is attacking the plankton.
The practical effect is extraordinary. When you swim through water dense with dinoflagellates, every movement creates light. Your arms trail glowing streaks. Fish dart past in phosphorescent lines. The interior of a dark volcanic cave shimmers like a submerged galaxy. It is not subtle — on a good night, the glow is bright enough to illuminate your hands and face underwater.
Unlike many bioluminescent locations around the world (where the phenomenon is seasonal and unpredictable), the plankton at Los Arcos are present year-round. Intensity varies with conditions — water temperature, nutrient levels, moon phase — but the glow is reliably visible on any dark night.
Where: Los Arcos Marine Park
Los Arcos National Marine Park is a cluster of granite rock formations rising from the sea approximately seven miles south of Puerto Vallarta, just offshore from the village of Mismaloya. The park consists of five islands with natural arches, underwater caves, and tunnels that create the ideal environment for bioluminescence: protected water, rich nutrient flow, and — critically — almost zero artificial light pollution.
During the day, Los Arcos is one of the top boat tour and snorkeling destinations in Banderas Bay. After dark, it transforms completely. The caves that snorkelers explore during daylight hours become pitch-black chambers where the only light comes from the plankton themselves. Swimming into a Los Arcos cave at night is the most intense way to experience bioluminescence anywhere on Mexico's Pacific coast.
Bioluminescence Boat Tours
The most common way to experience bioluminescence in Puerto Vallarta is on a guided boat tour. These typically depart 45 minutes to one hour before sunset, combining a scenic cruise along the coastline with a twilight arrival at Los Arcos. As darkness falls, guides lead guests into the water with snorkeling gear to swim among the glowing plankton — or you can observe from the boat if you prefer not to swim.
Two operators run regular bioluminescence boat tours with distinct departure points:
Sunset & Bioluminescence Boat Tour
The highest-rated bioluminescence experience in Puerto Vallarta. The tour departs from Mismaloya and reaches Los Arcos as the sun sets, giving you front-row seats to the sky changing colors above the rock formations. Once dark, guides lead you into the caves with snorkel gear to swim through glowing water. The contrast — pitch-black caves lit only by the plankton you disturb — is the most dramatic way to experience the phenomenon. Groups are small (around 14 passengers), which keeps the caves from feeling crowded. Start times shift seasonally to match sunset: 5:30 PM in winter, 6:30 PM in summer.
Kayak & SUP Bioluminescence Tours
If the boat tour is the most popular way to see bioluminescence, the kayak and paddleboard version is the most immersive. Without engine noise, the experience is entirely different — you hear the water, the night birds, and the rhythmic sound of your paddle breaking a surface that glows with every stroke. The silence amplifies everything.
Paddle Zone operates these tours from their beach club on Mismaloya Beach. The round trip to Los Arcos covers approximately five kilometers and takes about three hours including cave exploration and swim time. Kayak experience is not required — guides provide a paddling lesson before departure — though moderate fitness helps. For SUP first-timers, a free lesson is included the day before (sunrise tours) or the morning of (sunset tours).
After returning to shore, guests are welcomed with hot chocolate, cookies, fruit, and a campfire on the beach — a detail that reviewers consistently highlight as the perfect ending to the experience. Photos taken during the tour are included at no additional cost.
Best Time: Moon Phases & Seasons
Bioluminescence is visible year-round at Los Arcos, but intensity varies significantly based on two factors: moonlight and water temperature.
Moon Phase
This is the single biggest variable. The darker the sky, the brighter the glow appears. New moon nights produce the most dramatic visibility — the water looks like it contains liquid neon. Full moon nights wash out the effect with ambient light. The five days on either side of a new moon are ideal. Tour operators schedule departures around the lunar calendar and will advise on conditions when you book.
Seasonal Intensity
| Season | Water Temp | Bioluminescence | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Summer (Jun–Sep) | 82–86°F | Strongest | Warmest water, most active plankton, best glow intensity |
| Fall (Oct–Nov) | 80–84°F | Very Strong | Excellent conditions, fewer crowds than winter |
| Winter (Dec–Mar) | 72–78°F | Moderate | Cooler water, but still visible — bonus: whale sightings on the way |
| Spring (Apr–May) | 76–80°F | Moderate to Strong | Water warming up, plankton increasing, calm seas |
The short version: Any new-moon night between June and November delivers the most intense bioluminescence. But even a winter visit on a dark night produces visible glow — the phenomenon is reliable, just variable in intensity.
What to Bring & Practical Tips
Motion sickness: The boat ride to Los Arcos is short (20 minutes), but the boat sits stationary in open water while guests swim. If you are prone to seasickness, take medication one hour before departure. Multiple reviewers flag this as the one thing they wished they had prepared for.
What to wear: A swimsuit and a rash guard or quick-dry long-sleeve shirt. The water can feel cool after dark, especially in winter (low 70s °F). Bring a dry change of clothes and a towel for the return trip.
Photography: Bioluminescence is notoriously difficult to capture on smartphones. The light is too faint for standard camera sensors. Professional photographers use long-exposure settings and tripods. Bring a waterproof phone case if you want to try, but this is an experience best absorbed with your eyes rather than a screen. Tour operators often include GoPro photos taken during the excursion at no additional cost.
Reef-safe sunscreen: Use biodegradable, reef-safe sunscreen only. Los Arcos is a national marine park, and chemical sunscreens damage the plankton that create the bioluminescence you came to see.
Booking: New-moon nights sell out fastest, especially during peak season (December through April). Book at least one week in advance to secure your preferred date. Your Villa Experience concierge can coordinate timing with the lunar calendar and confirm the best departure for your stay.
Pair It: Sunset Cruise into Bioluminescence
The most memorable evenings on Banderas Bay combine two experiences: a sunset cruise on the open water, followed by a bioluminescence encounter after dark. Several tours are designed exactly this way — you depart in golden light, watch the sun sink below the horizon with a glass of wine in hand, and then head into the caves as the first glow appears in the water.
For villa guests who want to separate the experiences, your concierge can arrange a late-afternoon sunset sailing cruise from Marina Vallarta followed by a nighttime bioluminescence tour departing from Mismaloya — two completely different perspectives on the same bay in one evening.
Frequently Asked Questions
Your Concierge Plans the Night. You Step into the Glow.
Villa Experience villas include a dedicated concierge who coordinates bioluminescence tours around the lunar calendar, sunset cruises, and every water experience on Banderas Bay — matched to your group, your schedule, and the conditions that night.

